'Safe supply' program will distribute free opioids to entrenched users - Action News
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'Safe supply' program will distribute free opioids to entrenched users

Fifty people who use street drugs will be regularly prescribed opioid pills to crush up and inject, as part of a new 'safe supply' program coming to Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.

50 opioid users in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside will regularly get pills to crush up and inject

Moose Cree First Nation is looking at banishing people who sell illegal drugs and alcohol in order to protect the James Bay community from addiction. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

Carissa Sutherland's history with drugs is a lot like many others in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.

The 29-year-old startedabout 10 years ago withmorphine and hydromorphonepills marketed under the brand name Dilaudid or "Dilly" as it's known on the street.

"I kind of just progressed more and more, and then I couldn't get Dillies very much or they were more expensive than heroin, so that I ended up just doing heroin," said Sutherland, who soon added methamphetamine to the mix.

For her, anespecially low point came when she overdosed, alone, in a Wendy's bathroom about two years ago. Luckily, someone found her, and her life was saved.

Portland Hotel Society peer support worker Carissa Sutherland hopes to get into the new 'safe supply' program, which will distribute free injectable opioids to drug users. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

Now, a "safe supply"program for people inSutherland's situation is launching in the neighbourhood.

Operated by the Portland Hotel Society (PHS) out of its Molson Overdose Prevention Site (OPS), the pilot program will distribute free Dilaudidpills for 50 patients.

The hydromorphone pills, which are manufactured to be taken orally, will be crushed up and rendered as an injectable drug, just like heroin. It's the first time in Canada that opioids will be prescribed in this way and an idea that came directly from the street.

According to Coco Culbertson, who is overseeing the program for PHS, the dosage will be prescribed by a physician, and participants will be able to get up to five doses per day, to be injected under the supervision of PHS staff and volunteers.

Culbertson said the pills, which are worth about 36 cents when bought legally, cost drug users $20 - $30 on the street. According to Sutherland, a user on the street can make up to four or five pick ups perday to support a habit, sometimes buying multiple pills each time.

"We're really looking for our "hard target"folks that are experiencing repeated overdose and that are subject to a toxic drug supply on the street," said Culbertson, who added that there's already a list of about 75 people for the program, which starts on Tuesday.

"We are hoping that this program, in its simplicity, allows us to scale up as needed, and that a program like this can be easily replicated in other areas in other regions," she said.

Crosstown Clinic

Just a couple blocks away at the Crosstown Clinic, there's another injectable opioidtreatment program that's been operating for several years.

There, under the management of Dr. Scott MacDonald, about 130 patients are administered up to three daily, scheduled doses of either prescription heroin or hydromorphone.

Dr. Scott MacDonald with the Crosstown Clinic looks forward to seeing the results of the new 'safe supply' PHS pilot program but says his clinic could support many more patients if the funding was there. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

"This is safe.It's effective.It's cost effective.It reduces mortality, reduces crime both violent crime and property crime and it reduces the burden on taxpayers," said MacDonald, who believes the facility's pharmacy could distribute injectable doses for as many as 800 people across the region.

When asked what he thinks of PHS's newapproachto prescribingopioids to neighbourhood drug users, with a little less structure than Crosstown's system, MacDonaldsaid that it's a worthwhile scientific study to undertake, and he's looking forward to seeing the results.

Both programs include access to a wide variety of other social and health services.

'Safe supply'

Sutherland's life has taken a dramatic turn for the better since her overdose. She's still a regular drug user, but for the past year and a half, she's been injecting under supervision at MolsonOPS.

She quickly started volunteering there and now Sutherland's on the payrollas a peer support worker. She's taken part in reversing dozens of potentially fatal overdoses. She's also found housing through PHS.

But despite the more stable life, the drugs have still put her in risky situations. Sutherland is hoping that will disappear if she's accepted in the new 'safe supply' program.

"I'm hoping that once I get on the Dilly program, I won't have to do that I won't have to go boost from stores or steal from stores or sell things to get money to get drugs," she said.

For her, she says, safe supply doesn't just mean drugs that won'tcontain unknown amounts of deadly fentanyl, it also means a drug supply that leads to a muchsafer lifestyle.


Follow Rafferty Baker on Twitter: @raffertybaker